Shares of QTREX Quantum Ltd. surged again Monday, climbing 11.4% to $3.42, extending a breathtaking run from $0.73 just seven trading days ago — a gain of roughly 370% in a single week. The catalyst: a new purchase order from an unnamed U.S.-based Fortune 500 company for the firm's system that prints electronic circuits directly onto surfaces, bypassing traditional manufacturing steps. QTREX Quantum Wins a Fortune 500 Customer for Its Circuit-Printing Machine, but Does a 370% Weekly Surge Match the Balance Sheet of a $289,000-Revenue Company?
Shares of QTREX Quantum (QTEX) jumped 11.4% to $3.42 Monday after the Israel-based company announced a purchase order from an unnamed U.S. Fortune 500 multinational for its electronics printing system — a machine that fabricates complex circuits in a single step, bypassing traditional manufacturing. The stock now commands a market capitalization of roughly $141 million , up from under $15 million just ten days ago.
- A Big-Name Buyer, but No Dollar Figure Disclosed. The company did not disclose the financial terms of the order or identify the customer.
The system will be delivered to one of the customer's sites outside the United States. For context, QTREX's last publicly known equipment order was a $596,000 system sale to an Irish university in May , suggesting individual deals remain modest. Without a price tag, investors are buying a narrative, not a number.
- The Stock Has Outrun the Business by a Wide Margin. QTREX is still a tiny company: recent annual revenue is roughly $289,000, and book value per share is just $0.05.
The company lost $0.45 per share over the last twelve months, though analysts forecast revenue growth of 165% for fiscal 2026. Even if that forecast holds, revenue would barely top $750,000 — a fraction of the current valuation.
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Fresh Cash Buys Time, but Adds Dilution. QTREX priced a $10 million private placement of 6.67 million new shares with an institutional investor , with closing expected around June 1 and proceeds earmarked for working capital and commercialization. That capital extends the runway, but it also dilutes existing shareholders significantly. The institutional buyer's willingness to commit is a soft endorsement; the price they locked in — roughly $1.50 per share — sits well below today's market price.
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A Quantum Pivot Riding on Promises, Not Products Yet. The company was formerly known as Inspira Technologies, a medical-device maker, and changed its name to QTREX Quantum only in May 2026.
It is now in advanced discussions with a top-five global quantum computing company about adopting its printing technology for ultra-cold wiring inside quantum computers. Revenues remain tiny, profitability is not in sight, and valuation ratios are stretched to levels that only make sense if these early conversations convert to large-scale supply contracts — an outcome that remains highly uncertain.
Bottom line: The Fortune 500 order validates commercial interest in QTREX's technology, but every hard financial metric — revenue, earnings, book value — trails the stock price by orders of magnitude. This is pure momentum trading dressed up in a quantum narrative.